Predicting prognosis of nasopharyngeal carcinoma based on deep learning: peritumoral region should be valued

Cancer Imaging. 2023 Feb 9;23(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s40644-023-00530-5.

Abstract

Background: The purpose of this study was to explore whether incorporating the peritumoral region to train deep neural networks could improve the performance of the models for predicting the prognosis of NPC.

Methods: A total of 381 NPC patients who were divided into high- and low-risk groups according to progression-free survival were retrospectively included. Deeplab v3 and U-Net were trained to build segmentation models for the automatic segmentation of the tumor and suspicious lymph nodes. Five datasets were constructed by expanding 5, 10, 20, 40, and 60 pixels outward from the edge of the automatically segmented region. Inception-Resnet-V2, ECA-ResNet50t, EfficientNet-B3, and EfficientNet-B0 were trained with the original, segmented, and the five new constructed datasets to establish the classification models. The receiver operating characteristic curve was used to evaluate the performance of each model.

Results: The Dice coefficients of Deeplab v3 and U-Net were 0.741(95%CI:0.722-0.760) and 0.737(95%CI:0.720-0.754), respectively. The average areas under the curve (aAUCs) of deep learning models for classification trained with the original and segmented images and with images expanded by 5, 10, 20, 40, and 60 pixels were 0.717 ± 0.043, 0.739 ± 0.016, 0.760 ± 0.010, 0.768 ± 0.018, 0.802 ± 0.013, 0.782 ± 0.039, and 0.753 ± 0.014, respectively. The models trained with the images expanded by 20 pixels obtained the best performance.

Conclusions: The peritumoral region NPC contains information related to prognosis, and the incorporation of this region could improve the performance of deep learning models for prognosis prediction.

Keywords: Deep learning; Nasopharyngeal carcinoma; Peritumoral region; Prognosis prediction.

MeSH terms

  • Deep Learning*
  • Humans
  • Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma / diagnostic imaging
  • Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms* / diagnostic imaging
  • Prognosis
  • Retrospective Studies